Colin Wilson's classic exploration of the rebel as genius, with a new
introduction by Gary Lachman.
When the upstart English writer Colin Wilson debuted on the literary
scene with The Outsider in 1956, it marked one of the opening notes of
the cultural revolution of the sixties. Wilson celebrated the misfit not
as a figure be fixed and reintegrated into society, but as a lone
journeyer who often had a stirring artistic, political, or spiritual
innovation to convey to society.
Wilson lived this book as much as wrote it. As an impoverished
23-year-old, the Englishman slept in a tent in a London park so that he
could be free of material demands to dedicate himself fully to his
study. When The Outsider appeared in 1956, it became a sensation among
both critics and beats, who formed the vanguard of the dawning Aquarian
Age.
In Wilson's epic exploration of mystics, visionaries, literary pioneers,
political troublemakers, and rule breakers of all sorts, he evoked a new
kind of heroism, which changed how we view ourselves and our purpose in
life.
The Outsider is now reissued and reset in a beautiful Tarcher
Cornerstone Edition, with a new introduction by Wilson's friend and
biographer, Gary Lachman. This new volume coincides with Tarcher's
publication of Lachman's biography of Wilson, Beyond the Robot.